On 05/23/13 I had the privilege of fishing Union Valley Reservoir for the first time. The lake is a stunningly beautiful high sierra lake located in N. Ca.
My Wife, Cheryl and I attend Bridgeway Christian Church in Rocklin Ca. The church has an annual "GUYS ONLY" camping trip. This year it is being held at Union Valley Reservoir. The idea was to do some pre-fishing so that on 06/01/13, I could bring my boat up and take some of the guys at the camp out fishing.
My buddy Glenn Dougherty agreed to also pull his boat up for that day to take some of the guys out. Neither one of us had fished the lake before so I thought that at least one of us should look like he knew what he was doing.
I got up on 05/23 at 0400 Hrs and had the boat
hooked up and ready to go at 0500 Hrs. My friend, John Erickson agreed to join me for this trip. John is kind of new to fishing and wanted to learn some down rigging techniques and how to catch Kokanee. By 0645 Hrs, we were launching the boat. Two other boats had just launched and were still at the dock. I checked in with them and found that they had both fished the lake numerous times before. They reported that the Kokes were hitting on Red and or Green colored Hoochies with rainbow flashers. I had the flashers and just about every color hoochie but those two. They also said the Mackinaw were on the bite but holding pretty deep around 100'.
As we launched, the air temp was 27 degrees and the water temp was 57 degrees. The lake was covered in a tulle type fog with snow capped mountains in the background. It was stunningly beautiful. I had to stop the motor and just marvel at what beauty God had created. It was perfect except for the 27 degrees and hands that were to cold to bait the hook. It was so quiet that I did not want to spoil it and deployed the bow mounted electric trolling motor and began to troll. I was happy to see the other two boats had also cut the main motors and were running electric trolling motors.
I immediately started marking fish at 100 plus feet that looked pretty big. I am guessing they were the Mackinaw the guys had told me about. We also starting seeing a few fish in the 20' to 40' range that I hoped were Kokanee. We had the down riggers set at 15' and 25' trailing a Pink Hoochie tipped with garlic corn and a Greenish Yellow Hoochie also tipped with corn. Running straight off the stern we also had a lead core line out at about 15' deep with a green Wedding Ring tipped with a red worm.
After about an hour of only one missed hit we decided to start to change things up a bit. Put a red Wedding Ring on the Lead core and dropped it down another color. dropped the down riggers to 30' after hearing form one of the other boats that he had two hits and lost one at the boat, all at 30'.
Sue enough after about 10 minutes at 30' the green / yellowish Hoochie got hit hard. I reeled in a nice 13" Kokanee. We returned him back to the water to grow up a little.
Still continued marking fish at all depths. For awhile we dropped the down riggers to 90' to try and lure a Mackinaw over to our tasty looking Hoochies. We had a couple missed hits on the Lead Core and eventually a hit on the pink Hoochie at about 90' that John was able to reel in and get a 12" Kokanee in the boat. We also returned him back to the water hoping to see him again but grown up some.
We checked in with the other boats on the lake via our VHF radios and found that they were all doing about the same as we were. At about noon we decided that it was time to head to the dock and back to the real world.
Slow day of fishing with only a couple of fish, the weather turned out perfect warming up to about 60 degrees, a beautiful lake, a good friend, a couple great cigars (San Lutano and Drew Estates Java), and a couple beers. Man I love being retired!
Joe
Psalm 19:14